ANTI-WAR MARCH THIS SATURDAY (3/20)

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 11:36 PM

Dear Everyone,

This Saturday (March 20) will be the anti-war march in SF
11am at Civic Center

There's always money for war, but they keep cutting our education...

check it out on facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=246389069628&ref=mf

Students from SF State will meet at the Asian Art Museum at 10:30am.
CFA will meet at Plumbers Hall: 1621 Market Street (near Franklin) @ 10am.

SFSUNITED MARCH 4th FAQs -- Students, Faculty, Staff United

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 11:24 PM

SFSUNITED MARCH 4th FAQs
Students, Faculty, Staff United

Q: Why would those opposed to budget cuts shut their school down? I thought they valued learning.
A: Do workers go on strike because they hate their jobs? No. They strike and shut down production to protect the devaluation of their work. Think about this: When a janitor takes a pay cut, she suffers privately. When she asks the boss for mercy, she is vulnerable and can be ignored or fired. But when she organizes the other janitors to channel their private pain and fight collectively, each member becomes a powerful counter-force to reckon with.
We strike to protect what we value.
The tactic of “Shut Downs” have been used by students and workers throughout history. Every important gain has been won through sustained collective confrontation, at that tipping point where anger turns into action.

Q: Is a Strike counterproductive?
A:
We’ve already won a small victory. Aides to Gov. Schwarzenegger have already let it slip to union officials that the decision to restore $305 million to the CSU system was in response to the protests and occupations that spread during the Fall. The hope was to quiet the campuses during the election season, but in doing so they have exposed the lie that there is no money for education. This is proof that tactics of mass militant action is what scares Sacramento.
The $305 million however came at the cost of cutting health care. The cuts to prison spending only meant its privatization. That’s why we need sustained shutdowns up and down the State. Although the campuses may lead the charge, strikes need to spread beyond the Universities to the most important sectors of the Californian economy. Only then will there be a crisis that can really threaten the bosses and politicians. March 4th is an important first step in building the kind of movement necessary to reverse the budget cuts.

Q: The power is in Sacramento, why don’t you go there?
A:
Isn’t it a bit suspicious that UC president Yudof and SFSU president Robert Corrigan are so enthusiastic about going to Sacramento? The elite in this state are afraid of what can happen on our campuses and we have to exploit this weakness. Simply put: we can all write letters to Sacramento, but there are more powerful people who can write checks. We have power at the University precisely because we can shut it down.
Lobbying D.C. did not get us civil rights, sit-ins did. Begging Sacramento didn’t get us the college of Ethnic Studies, a 9-month student strike did.

Q: Things are better now. Shouldn’t I just worry about graduation?
A:
If you were fortunate enough to get your classes this semester, you can point directly to the fact that 18,000 students were denied admission from the CSU during 2009-2010 (with 40,000 planned for 2010-2011) . The $305 million restored only covers half of what was cut, and student fees will again increase by 10%. State legislators, along with Obama’s Race to the Top program, are committed to use budget crises
as a battering ram to privatize education and break the unions.
Racing toward graduation guarantees nothing. Increased fees turn into more personal debt as we enter the worst job market for college graduates in decades. The budget cuts are not just an attack on education, but the entire public sector. MUNI/BART fares will continue to increase, cuts to social services, and hiring freezes will only get worse unless a real movement begins now. We cannot ‘wait this out.’ If they believe we’ll accept whatever they give us, they’ll continue to crack the whip.

Q: There is no money in California and we are in an economic crisis. Don’t we all have to share the sacrifice?
A:
By this, the rich want workers and students to share the sacrifice amongst each other. In spite of some of the money Bill Gates or the Walton family have lost, they could still personally write a check and solve the entire budget “crisis” and have tens of billions left over. Budget cuts are an attempt to transfer the costs of the economic crisis onto the working class, via furloughs, fee hikes, wage cuts, MUNI/BART increases etc. Working people are the victims of this crisis, not the cause. As one Republic Windows and Doors worker put it, “I understand that some bad business deals were made, but I don’t make business deals, I make doors.”

Q: What’s the solution?
A:
The rich have a solution to the state and national crises they created: Make workers, the poor, children and elderly pay. We have to reject that answer and propose our own solution: tax the rich. The combined wealth of the richest 1% of Americans is $21.9 trillion. A one-time 3 percent tax on this wealth would more than double the general funds of all 50 states. This is how absurd the budget crisis is. Our movement must aim to take the trillions of dollars spent on bailing out banks, funding wars, and building prisons. and put them into health care, jobs, and education.


Why You Shouldn’t Cross The Picket Line

A picket line is meant to call attention to attacks on workers and to disrupt business as usual. Bosses know that worker’s strength lie in their numbers and solidarity and will attempt to divide them at any cost. Crossing a picket line undermines organizing attempts and allows abuses to go unchallenged.
We should not have to shoulder the burden of the budget cuts privately. Today we picket as part of a state-wide movement that must continue to grow. Don’t allow them to divide us with academic threats. If we’re all out here, there’s nothing they can do to stop us.

Summary of Votes and Bottom Liners Assigned to Tasks General Assembly 2/17/2010

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 2:52 AM

Votes

1. occupy 19th and Holloway - passes

2. convince to strike, not force, info picket, no pulling fire alarms – passes

3. closed occupation – defeated, one vote for

4. critical mass to civic center, delegates – passes

5. one central open occupation – clarification of proposal, last longer, teaching, version of what we want our university to be – passes

6. Answer 3/20 anti-war – pass

7. SFSUnited, joint faculty picket, noon-2pm, open sit-ins, student pickets continue – clarification, noon-1pm solidarity with staff, and get – passes

8. Zero tolerance for cuts. – passes

9. 8 am picket to shutdown (minute taker distracted, not clear what happened to this proposal, but it is essentially an amendment to vote #2, asking for the picket to start earlier). – pass (clarified)

Bottomliners list

1. General conference of ethnic student organizations– Jamal, Roshan

2. College of Humanities teach-in – Alex

3. Ethnic Studies teach-in/forum – Roshan, Anita

4. Reach out to Health center, public health workers – Greg

5. Banners for each academic dept – Spencer, Krystale

6. City Health Center outreach – Michelle

7. Creative Arts program schedule to be produced, event - Natasha

9. Speakers in quad, noon-2 – Akasha

10. Freshman outreach campaign – Kendall

11. Calendar with post Mar 4 events - Krystale

12. Classroom announcements – everybody.

General Assembly- Draft Agenda

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 12:09 AM

Here is the draft agenda for the General Assembly (2/17/2010). The agenda for the GA is broken into 4 main points that we will expand on in the next SFSUnited meeting.


1. What is a General Assembly/ Call Out for others to get involved [3 min.]
2. What is SFSUnited? How will it benefit you? [5min]
-What is SFSUnited doing (each committee explain) [2min each, 12min.]
3.BREAKOUT by COLLEGE (How can you organize your department for March 4?What do you want to see happening on March 4? What can we achieve?) [20 min.]
-Discussion/Reportback/Vote [30 min.]
4. Debate on Business Occupation/March 4th [40min]

We are still trying to figure out if we want the vote to be part of the Discussion/Reportback or to have it at the very end, after the debate.

The expanded version of the agenda and announcements will be printed and distributed during the General Assembly after running it through the SFSUnited coalition.

GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 11:20 AM



In case many of you don't know, this coming Wednesday (February 17,2010) is going to be the first General Assembly of the semester. We invite all students, faculty, staff and all others who may be interested in voicing their opinions on the current budget cuts to education and helping build collectively towards March 4, a statewide day of action, to come to this event. This General Assembly will also be host to the first ever open debate on the December 9th occupation of the Business building at SFSU.

Date: Wednesday , February 17, 2010
Time: 7pm
Location: Rosa Parks A-C (in the Cesar Chavez Student Center)

Light refreshments will be served

There is also a facebook page for this event. ( http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=292447152234 )

If interested in helping organize this event, the GA planning committee(A part of SFSUnited) meets on Tuesdays at noon in Cafe 101.

=)

Demands- work in progress

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 1:50 PM

SFSU-specific Demands

-End Furloughs (connect to full funding, no layoffs), reinstate laid-off faculty and staff, reinstate SETC union workers, that were replaced by independent contractors, and provide (adequate(wording)) wages for all faculty and staff.

EOPSS, and project connect.

-That the University and all auxiliary Organizations on campus make investment portfolios transparent.

-Abandon plans for the construction of the Recreation and Wellness center, no increase in student fees

-That students, faculty and staff receive a discount for transportation on MUNI and BART.

-Keep the Ethnic Studies Resource and Empowerment Center, and the Stay-in-School Family Resource Center open

-That a permanent location be established on campus for students to organize.

-Absolve all academic disciplinary action taken against students for participating in the occupation of the business building or any other direct actions, as they are exercising their rights as human beings and students.

-That a diverse body of representatives from the faculty, staff, and student body share decision making power on campus.

-That decisions on how budget cuts are made and how much is cut from each department be made public.

-That a student run food co-op be established on campus, for struggling students affected by budget cuts.

*That all administrative and executive positions at SFSU be student and faculty elected (long term goal)

Statewide demands

()That education, from kindergarten through PHD, be free of charge for students, and that all institutions adhere to a single standard of education.

() That all military recruiters be expelled from soliciting students on campus.

-That all student loans be forgiven, and that the 40,000 prospective students that were rejected due to the budget cuts be allowed to attend SFSU.

-Reinstatement of Masterplan

CSU specific-demands

()That the CSU board of trustees be dissolved, or be elected, with recall provisions, by students faculty and staff.

()That administrators with salaries above the median salary have their pay reduced down to the median.

CFA Demands

-Close corporate loopholes

-Amend Prop 13

-AB 656- tax on oil

-tax the rich (redundant?)

Strategy

-Build student union

- Build capacity of SFSUnited in order to achieve goals.

-By withholding fees, demand the creation of a committee of students, faculty, staff, and workers that can negotiate budgetary decisions.

Join SFSUnited every Tuesday 5:30pm Ethnic Studies 116!

Posted by SFSunited | Posted in | Posted on 12:12 AM

Current Projects:
-March 4
-Outreach
-Demands
-Research & Education
-Action/Events
-General Assembly Planning
-Labor